So I'm working on a Python IRC framework, and I'm using Python's socket
module. Do I feel like using Twisted? No, not really.
Anyway, I have an infinite loop reading and processing data from socket.recv(xxxx)
, where xxxx
is really irrelevant in this situation. I split the received data into messages using str.split("\r\n")
and process them one by one.
My problem is that I have to set a specific 'read size' in socket.recv()
to define how much data to read from the socket. When I receive a burst of data (for example, when I connect to the IRC server and receive the MOTD.etc), there's always a message that spans two 'reads' of the socket (i.e. part of the line is read in one socket.recv()
and the rest is read in the next iteration of the infinite loop).
I can't process half-received messages, and I'm not sure if there's even a way of detecting them. In an ideal situation I'd receive everything that's in the buffer, but it doesn't look like socket
provides a method for doing that.
Any help?